Date: 19980602
Docket: 97-1084-IT-I
BETWEEN:
LUCIEN MARQUIS,
Appellant,
and
HER MAJESTY THE QUEEN,
Respondent.
Reasons for Judgment
Tardif J.T.C.C.
[1] This is an appeal for the 1993 taxation year.
[2] The appellant testified in support of his appeal; he
explained that he had guaranteed a $34,000 loan made to
Jean-Guy Asselin personally by the National Bank of
Canada on June 12, 1989.
[3] As he knew Jean-Guy Asselin well, the appellant
agreed to guarantee it so he could obtain the loan in the
aforesaid amount in order to invest in the company
2644-8472 Québec Inc., for which he was working.
This was a business which printed documents.
[4] Part of the money from the loan was used to purchase
33 1/3 percent of the company's capital stock, and
the balance was injected into the company in the form of advances
as a director.
[5] The appellant said that in order to secure the risks
inherent in his guarantee, he insisted that the newly purchased
shares obtained as a result of the loan secured by his guarantee
be given to him as security. Jean-Guy Asselin
accordingly assigned his share certificate to the appellant after
endorsing it.
[6] The share certificate, which was certificate No. 1
and represented 1,000 common shares, was thus assigned to the
appellant the same day it was issued. The back of the certificate
was filled out accordingly.
[7] Two descriptions of the share certificate were entered in
evidence. The evidence never provided any explanation of the
various information given on the back of the certificate; I refer
in particular to the fact that one indicated that $1,000 had been
paid for the shares and another referred to an expenditure of
$35,000.
[8] However, the copy of the financial statements for the year
ending August 31, 1990 provides the correct answer,
indicating that the amount paid for the shares was $1,000. That
document indicated that Jean-Guy Asselin held a
$24,000 debt described as follows:
[TRANSLATION]
4. LONG-TERM DEBTS 1990
Financing on real estate improvements in the amount of $19,000
payable on January 14, 1994. Interest rate is
10 percent per annum.
Interest begins to run on January 15, 1990
$ 19,000.00
Financing to be paid to McCutcheon Graphique Inc. on
equipment. The method of repayment is as follows: the balance
payable will be reduced by the difference between the invoice
price and the net price on purchases in the preceding month
$ 12,346.63
Directors’ advances, with no provision for repayment or
interest
Claudette Asselin: $ 84,000.00
Jean-Guy Asselin: $ 24,000.00
$ 139,346.63
Part of long-term debt falling due within a year $
2,000.00
$137,346.63
[9] The evidence did not indicate what the $8,000 was used
for, this being the difference between the amount spent for the
shares and the advance made to 2644-8472 Québec
Inc., and the amount of the loan, $34,000.
[10] Nearly four years later the lending institution, the
National Bank of Canada, required the appellant to pay the
$31,646 outstanding on the loan made to Asselin on June 12,
1989, as Asselin had clearly not met his obligations.
[11] The following week, on May 11,
Jean-Guy Asselin made an assignment of his property.
In response to a peremptory demand for payment by the National
Bank of Canada, the appellant signed a demand note in favour of
that banking institution, as a result of the guarantee he had
given.
[12] As he believed he was the owner of the shares issued to
Jean-Guy Asselin, the appellant asserted his rights to
the trustee to recover the amounts he now owed to the National
Bank of Canada under the note which he had to sign. These claims
proved to be futile and he was unable to recover anything
whatever. He therefore lost $31,646 because of his guarantee.
[13] Broadly speaking, those are the facts which prompted the
appellant to maintain that his loss should be characterized as a
business investment loss.
[14] The appellant argued that the character of the loss
should be determined as of the period of the bankruptcy, when he
himself had become a shareholder. Was he actually a shareholder
of the company at the time of the bankruptcy? I doubt this;
moreover, the evidence in this regard was deficient, as the
appellant did not know whether the share transfers were subject
to certain limitations; moreover, he never established that he
had been involved in the company's affairs before the
bankruptcy. There was no oral or documentary evidence to show
that the share transfer was authorized and ratified by the
company's board of directors. The company was a private one
in which the share transfer undoubtedly was subject to certain
restrictions, or at least certain formalities.
[15] In any case, accepting the appellant's reasoning
would not mean his appeal should be allowed, since the weight of
the evidence was that the value of the shares he claimed to own
was not exactly the amount he estimated; on the contrary, the
weight of the evidence was that those shares had no par value and
that only $1,000 was spent to acquire them. What was their value
at the time of the actual transfer, which took place on the day
the bank exercised its rights under the guarantee? In view of the
short time lapse between this and the date of the bankruptcy, it
must be assumed that the shares had no value at the time of the
transfer.
[16] There is no doubt that the guarantee signed by the
appellant on June 12, 1989 was not for any purpose relating
to economic viability; it was an act prompted and called for by
concerns which strictly speaking had nothing to do with any
expectation of deriving a profit or benefit. As he knew
Jean-Guy Asselin very well, he made this generous
gesture. Moreover, the guarantee in no way benefited the company
issuing the shares; it was a benefit only to
Jean-Guy Asselin in his capacity as a responsible and
autonomous individual. He could quite easily have decided to
squander the proceeds of the loan, invest them elsewhere, pay
debts or buy a car or any other consumer good.
[17] How could it be contended or argued that there was any
economic purpose to the guarantee, since if the loan which he had
guaranteed had been repaid the appellant would not have received
any benefit or profit?
[18] If a shareholder guarantees a loan obtained by the
company in which he holds his shares, it seems reasonable to
assume that this is a legal act which could improve or enhance
the value of the shares held. In other words, the guarantee may
produce a profit or lead to a loss.
[19] In the instant case the money obtained went to a third
party who invested it in the company. The appreciation or
expectation of profit benefited the shareholder, not the
appellant who gave the guarantee.
[20] There was no direct connection between the guarantee and
the acquisition of shares. If the company issuing the shares had
been successful and prosperous the benefits, profits or
appreciation would essentially have gone to the holder of the
shares, and would in no way have accrued to the person who
essentially had physical custody or control of them.
[21] In the appellant's submission, custody of the shares
was transformed into a right of ownership if the borrower did not
meet his obligations to the lending institution. That may have
been possible, but the transfer of ownership of the shares
required that a number of formalities and procedures be
completed, and this was not established. Moreover, the appellant
admitted he did not know whether the share transfer was subject
to restrictions. There was no evidence of the date or time of the
transfer, which could not have taken place before the default by
the principal borrower on his obligations to the financial
institution. Additionally, what was the actual value of the
shares? This was not established by the evidence.
[22] To be successful the appellant would have to have shown
on a balance of probabilities that at the time he decided to
invest as guarantor there was a reasonable expectation of
enrichment. Such evidence was impossible as the guarantee
resulted in the making of a loan over which the appellant had no
direct or indirect control. He could not even influence or direct
the use of the money obtained with his guarantee. Further, the
fact that only $1,000 was used to purchase the company's
capital stock and the balance went as cash advances to the
company speaks volumes about the appellant's limited power,
and even total absence of control, over the investment which
resulted from the loan.
[23] So far as the hypothetical rights conferred on him by the
share certificate are concerned, I believe that actually this
essentially showed that the guarantee produced not an expectation
of gain or profit but a possibility of loss. In other words, if
things had gone well for the borrower the appellant would have
received no benefit or profit and would never have been called on
to make good the amount; on the other hand, if everything went
badly the appellant was automatically a loser. I do not see how
he could theoretically have received any benefit from his
guarantee, directly or indirectly. In any case, there was no
evidence of it.
[24] For these reasons, the appeal is dismissed.
Signed at Ottawa, Canada, June 2, 1998.
“Alain Tardif”
J.T.C.C.
Translation certified true on this 16th day of December
1998.
Kathryn Barnard, Revisor